"There is no absolute way to know if the dollar will go up, down or sideways – it may well do all of these things. The only certainty is that it will move."
Claude Tygier, CEO, who started his career as a foreign exchange trader
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Your company is exposed to currency risks whenever it does business in a non-euro currency. Exchange rates can vary in the time between entering a contract and currency repatriation or payment. Other sources of currency risk include exposures and holdings, or future transactions, in foreign currencies.
The size of currency risk depends on the company’s overall currency position, the size of the business transaction, and the billing period. Other factors are your foreign-currency business as a share of net sales, your pricing power and the competitive environment.
Currency risk can form when a company buys items from abroad in the local currency but sells them in its home country in euros. The company buys at a fixed price in a foreign currency, but is only billed at some point in the future. Meanwhile, it has had to set its sales prices in its local currency. Correct quantification of currency risk is therefore the key to currency hedging.
Hedging can reduce the impact of exchange rate movements on your company’s finances: you can make your company’s finances more predictable, maintain liquidity and reduce fluctuations in cash flows and income.
"There is no absolute way to know if the dollar will go up, down or sideways – it may well do all of these things. The only certainty is that it will move."
Claude Tygier, CEO, who started his career as a foreign exchange trader